Article by
Barbados Today

Published on
November 22, 2016

NASSAU – Prime Minister Perry Christie emphatically stated Monday that the proposed $2.1b agri-fisheries venture with Chinese investors at the centre of widespread public controversy would never have been approved by his government.

Christie spoke directly to the infamous proposal as he pushed back against claims from the Official Opposition that the government’s bid to establish a select committee to investigate the sale of BTC was a diversion tactic.

“The government of the Bahamas did not agree to any such proposition,” he told the House of Assembly Monday, “did not consider any such proposition, it did not come before the government as a proposal, and it would not have reached the government because it would have been rejected outright.

“We do not do that in the Bahamas, and I keep on saying you cannot have a debate where you miss the fact that it did not happen. Therefore, you are attributing to the government in debate what could have happened if the government had agreed, and you’re planting in people’s mind and this is more than disingenuous, it is a commitment they have made to trying to exploit an issue that is a non-issue.”

The proposal reportedly projects a $2.1b injection into the local economy over ten years through an equal partnership between Bahamians and the People’s Republic of China. The proposal also reportedly included the option to lease 10,000 acres of Crown land in Andros.

Agriculture and Fisheries Minister V Alfred Gray has admitted that he gave Bahamas Ambassador to China Paul “Andy” Gomez the go-ahead to have discussions on the proposal, but has stressed that the matter is not before the government for consideration.

Gray has said the ideas put forth in the proposal, which was leaked to the media, came from Gomez and not Chinese investors.

The proposal has been condemned by various local and international environmental lobby groups, who raised concerns over sustainability, and sovereignty in light of China’s grisly environmental record.

Montagu MP Richard Lightbourn Monday questioned why Gray would encourage further discussion of the proposal if there was no intention to agree to its terms.

“Why would the member for MICAL waste the time and effort of the government and government officials to negotiate with a government when you’re going to say there was no intention whatsoever to give them fishing rights?” Lightbourn asked.

“Well then why are you negotiating it? Why are you even discussing it? If that is the case it look like the member for MICAL went out on a limb, carried out his own agenda, I would have thought in those circumstances if he had no permission from the government to even discuss this, he should be dismissed.”

Defending his administration over the controversy, Christie said: “It has become a matter of urgent and extreme importance that the other side is using to exploit emotions in this country. The government of the Bahamas has fastidiously committed itself to protecting the waters of the Bahamas for Bahamian fisherman, full stop, no further.”

Christie explained that every minister – within his portfolio – had the right to explore opportunities to advance the country. He noted that some government MPs were philosophically and fundamentally opposed to foreign involvement in both farming and fishing.

“We are not going to compromise and no discussion will lead to a conclusion that this government would have contemplated or agreed for that to happen,” Christie said.

“A minister in association with anyone could explore opportunities for the Bahamas but he has to bring that as a proposal to his colleagues, who will make a determination as to whether they would agree,” the Prime Minister added. “That’s my side, that’s their side [opposition], that’s how constitutional government works and my government would not have agreed to that in any event.”

Last week, Lisa Benjamin and Dr Adelle Thomas, assistant professors and co-founders of the Climate Change Initiative at the University of the Bahamas, said that significant gaps existed in the Bahamas’ commercial legislative policies. The lecturers posited that gaps were so great that it was hard to imagine that the “scale of commercial fishing and processing enterprises anticipated by the proposal would abide by the limits currently set out in legislation”.

The professors said without regulations on matters such as catch or vessel sizes, or the capacity to enforce any of those restrictions, the Bahamas could join the “long list of failed fisheries sectors” in the Caribbean “well within a ten-year period”.